Sidney Poitier legacy still looms large in post-#OscarsSoWhite era

Depending on the generation of the person you ask, the name Sidney Poitier can either evoke a kind of peerless reverence or apathetic indifference. The iconic actor, who turned 89 in February, hasn’t appeared in a major motion picture in nearly 20 years, and yet his screen persona – described by African-American Film Critics Association president Gil Robertson to MSNBC as combination of “integrity, class and sophistication” – has reverberated in Hollywood in ways both big and small since his first big screen appearance in 1950.

This week, New York City’s Museum of the Moving Image is holding a retrospective on his illustrious career, curated by the co-editor of “Poitier Revisited: Reconsidering a Black Icon in the Obama Age,” Vassar College film professor Mia Mask. According to Mask, the program was initiated in part because of the current, racially polarizing political climate and national conversation on diversity in film and television inspired by the #OscarsSoWhite controversy. This is the “perfect time” to revisit the actor’s often overlooked filmography, he said.

“Poitier was at the forefront of trying to change the image of black men and black people,” Mask told MSNBC on Wednesday. And while she believes he has had a radical impact on how white audiences, and by extension, white people perceived African-Americans, the issues that some of his films confronted – from racial profiling to police brutality, as well as unflattering, stereotypical portrayals of black masculinity in the media – still persist to this day.

In the late ’50s and 1960s, Poitier was for many white people a window into the black experience. He was what the New York Times once described as a “an ambassador to white America and a benign emblem of black power.” His virtually flawless and accommodating protagonists helped usher in more humane portrayals of African-American life, while helping the country prepare for the arrival of a real-life black leader like President Barack Obama.

For black audiences, though, his films connoted quality and they also presented an image of themselves they were craving to see on screen. “Sidney Poitier [films] were like buying a Nancy Wilson album or a Prince album, you knew what you were getting. If he’s [in a movie] I know it meets a standard of excellence I know I’m going to appreciate,” said Robertson. “He is never going to do ‘Booty Call,’ he’s never going to do something that makes me sorry that I spent the money.”

“Sex and the City” star Blair Underwood is one of the actors who bore the fruits of Poitier’s labor. “Sidney Poitier is very much the Jackie Robinson of Hollywood,” he told MSNBC on Wednesday. “He gave you something to aspire to. He is the man who inspired me to go and become an actor.” For Underwood, Poitier’s strength and humanity had an appeal that stretched beyond race, and his films usually had a message that was timely and true.

According to Underwood, who recently dined with the iconic actor and considers him a mentor, back in 1994 when Underwood was grappling with whether to

Actor Sidney Poitier is photographed with his Oscar statuette at the 36th Annual Academy Awards in Santa Monica, Calif. on April 13, 1964. He won Best Actor for his role in “Lillies of the Field.”

Photo by AP

take on a role as a serial killer in the thriller “Just Cause,” Poitier told him, “I came along at a time where I didn’t have a choice [in roles]. I didn’t have the luxury when I was coming a long. I did that so you didn’t have to. So you play that role and you play it well.”

That conversation left an indelible impression on Underwood, who has seen a dramatic shift in the diversity and the variety of representation of people of color in film and television over his own award-winning career. Poitier disciples see a direct line from the actor’s contributions to cinema to the work of Denzel Washington, Will Smith and even television producer Shonda Rhimes, figures who Mask says “combine elements of the Poitier persona into a repertoire.”

Still, the fact that Poitier’s films and the man himself were often both radical is often lost on younger film buffs. Take for instance his role in the 1967 best picture Oscar winner “In the Heat of the Night.” Poitier played Virgil Tibbs, a black police officer from the Northeast who is drawn into a murder investigation in the deep South while he is passing through. His character must confront prejudices from not just suspects, but local law enforcement as well. In a pivotal scene, Poitier confronts one of the wealthy elites of the community who takes issue with his high status as a black man.

The elderly white man slaps Poitier, who quickly returns a blow. It was a quiet but profound moment in cinema history, particularly for African-Americans.

“I think I watched that scene 50 times,” said Robertson. “It should be required viewing for every African-American, particularly our young men.” To him, the scene said “You’ll respect me or these are the consequences. I’m standing my ground.”

“The slap [by Poitier] was not in the initial script,” added Mask. “Poitier told producers either you change the script of I don’t make the film. This was a radical thing for a black actor to be able to do. To say, ‘If you want the Poitier brand in this film you’re going to have to comply.”

Of course, establishing a brand as a black actor in Hollywood at that time was an arduous process, which occasionally meant taking roles Poitier considered beneath him (“Porgy & Bess”) or those that were incredibly compromised by the social morays of the time. “Poitier was made to over-compensate for his blackness, for his black identity,” said Mask. “This was one of the things that was problematic for black audiences in the ’60s.”

A prime example of this dichotomy can be viewed in arguably his most famous role in “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner,” a 1967 film that dealt with the then-taboo subject of interracial romance that has been ridiculed as hopelessly dated by modern standards. Poitier plays a immaculately dressed, hyper-articulate doctor with credentials from the United Nations and yet he is still initially met with disapproval by his white fiancee’s father, played by the late Spencer Tracy.

By the late 1960s Poitier’s squeaky-clean image provoked an inevitable backlash, which Mask says “deeply wounded” him. In a late 1967 column “Why Does White America Love Sidney Poitier So?” (which arrived the same year Poitier made history as the first black star ranked as the No. 1 box office draw in Hollywood), writer Clifford Mason eviscerated his career and castigated him for “playing essentially the same role, the antiseptic, one-dimensional hero.”

With the rise of the Black Panthers and Hollywood’s embrace of the so-called “blaxploitation” era, Poitier’s persona became decidedly un-hip for a time. He appeared on film with far less frequency after the mid-’70s, and to this day some black audiences see him as a relic of white liberal fantasies.

“Sidney Poitier is so ingrained and so a part of the American experience and identity, he’s almost like a rite of passage,” Robertson argues, while suggesting that black ambiguity about the roles he played is like like “the period of angst you go through with your parents.”

“You eventually arrive at a place where you understand that he was a man playing in the system and winning. He wasn’t the anti-hero, he was the herp,” he added. “It’s OK if you don’t think Sidney Poitier was cool, you’ll come around.”

According to Mask, a good place to start rediscovering his talent is 1972’s “Buck and the Preacher,” which she selected to screen as a part of the Museum of the Moving Image’s retrospective. The film, which co-stars fellow early black Hollywood icon Harry Belafonte, is the rare western with black leads and features a plot about newly freed slaves being shuttled through hostile territory and portrays a unique alliance between Native Americans and African-Americans.

Mask calls it a “very politically radical film that never got its due.” Coincidentally, she says it was Poitier’s personal favorite of all his work.

“He always saw the bigger picture. He is very much a renaissance man,” adds Underwood. “Whoever is the hottest actor at the moment … we’re all standing on the shoulders of Mr. Poitier.”